Okay, so I decided to start a thread about nitrogen and other factors for healthy gardening after discussing on another thread how that I noticed my plants that my dog pees on start reviving and turning green.
I would like to discuss this and other strategies to bring health to garden soil and grow healthy plants (veggies, herbs, flowers, trees, bushes, etc).
I am on a carnivore diet, and it is helping a lot of health issues. But I have a theory that it is the poor soil conditions that lead to sick malnutritioned plants, making them more vulnerable to pests ...and thus, higher oxalate production in the plants. Oxalates are the chemicals that plants produce to ward off being eaten by insects. But plants grown in healthy soils have much less pest pressure. Insects don't like to eat healthy plants. They go after the sicker plants. So ...I believe that if we had better soil biology, plants wouldn't produce as much oxalates, making them healthier for people to eat.
Oxalates are at the root of conditions like gout, arthritis, cysts, kidney stones, skin conditions, etc, and can kill a person if they eat too much at once. My digestive system began to shut down after years on keto, eating 2 huge salads a day and very little protein and fat. I had to let go of 99% of plant foods to heal my gut. But I plant gardens for my chickens. (lol) And I hope that one day, I will have healthy enough soils that I can eat the plants I grow because they won't have the need to produce as many oxalates.
Thoughts, anyone?
Tagging @MA2444
I would like to discuss this and other strategies to bring health to garden soil and grow healthy plants (veggies, herbs, flowers, trees, bushes, etc).
I am on a carnivore diet, and it is helping a lot of health issues. But I have a theory that it is the poor soil conditions that lead to sick malnutritioned plants, making them more vulnerable to pests ...and thus, higher oxalate production in the plants. Oxalates are the chemicals that plants produce to ward off being eaten by insects. But plants grown in healthy soils have much less pest pressure. Insects don't like to eat healthy plants. They go after the sicker plants. So ...I believe that if we had better soil biology, plants wouldn't produce as much oxalates, making them healthier for people to eat.
Oxalates are at the root of conditions like gout, arthritis, cysts, kidney stones, skin conditions, etc, and can kill a person if they eat too much at once. My digestive system began to shut down after years on keto, eating 2 huge salads a day and very little protein and fat. I had to let go of 99% of plant foods to heal my gut. But I plant gardens for my chickens. (lol) And I hope that one day, I will have healthy enough soils that I can eat the plants I grow because they won't have the need to produce as many oxalates.
Thoughts, anyone?
Tagging @MA2444